Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 273, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 March 1930 — Page 6

PAGE 6

ALL THE SONS OF ADAM ARE ROMANTIC, SAYS AUTHOR

Woman Hits at Views of Rudy Vallee •tp mrf romtnt<'l (ban Tnm#o, nl*nd< Darrarh Mdrkb, woman notelt. in thf •rtirl# Thin I* bwr "r to Rod* Villpp, toirni •rrh*tra dpf and alnfpr. who wrotp In The 'in Tnpdar. that women are the 11* romantir *e. BV IIAHRAGH ALDRICH IV*E first Adam was a romantic, and all the sons of Adam have been made in his image and likeness. The first Adam was lonely. Eden was all that he desired but a great yearning filled his heart. He had dominion and he had companionship. That is, he chatted comfortably with the animals and In the evening he walked with God. But the thoughts of God were as much beyond him as the aspirations of the beasts were below him. What Adam wanted was a mixture of both. To love him, understand him, work with him and play with him. So, in passionate yearning, he fell asleep and dreamed Eve. That is the crux of the whole matter. Eve did not dream Adam. Adam dreamed Eve. Eve. for her part., that she is a dream and ever ince has tried to occupy Adam's entire imagination. She has no time to be romantic herself.,. She must be the object of romance. Its inspiration and its satisfaction. She bedecks herself physically and mentally to that end, for she knows her Adam as he is—a lover, a dreamer, a romantic. a a a THEN there was Cinderella and the prince C'nderella was not romantic. She was competent. A prince was a mighty' good match. But for a prince to view an ashmaiden as the sharer of his throne j —that took a romantic complex. How he mooned about over that glass slipper! When he found out that it fitted a cinder wench, did he grieve? Not a bit of it. He saw her as a princess! Romantic fires burn brightest in men's hearts. The great adventurers, explorers, and Inventors have been men. The lure of many-colored vomance drew them while wives and sweethearts waited. Even the most unlikely masculine exterior hides a romantic soul. What is the so-called ‘ Big Business” man but a romantic youth in search of buried treasure? I have seen the light shining In the eyes of an old prospector in the west. In the eyes of a lover when he talked of his Golden Girl. And in the eyes of a small boy when he told me of what he was going to do when he grew up. The small girl does not thrill over the lure of the unknown future. She dutifully attends her bisque children, I her house in the piano-box, herj marketing, and her social calls upon the piano-box next door, while the; romantic sex fi'rhts Indians, puts out fires, brings home gold and captives, builds forts and takes them from the enemy by storm. This distinction between genders holds throughout life. a b a THE great, romances of the world —prose and poetry—have been written by’ men. not women. The great romantic characters of history and drama have bepn men, not I women. Most of all, I have found romance richly flowering in the hearts of men who live in out-of-the-way places that we (my Romantic and myself> have penetrated by portage and canoe. Few women are to be found beyond the conventional travel routes. Still fewer are lured thither by Romance. Most of them are complainlngly drudging for their adventurous lords or have nobly responded to the call of duty. Woman, being far more practical than romantic, still uses her sex charm for her personal ends, which may be a home and children, or may be a diamond bracelet. On the other hand it is the Torn ~+*~, net the practical impulse, that sways the man. Whatever the cost, he goes ahead. It may be his career that he sacrifices. It may be his kingdom. It gives way before his love for the woman. History is full of si:**' instances. Which was the more romantic. Antony or Cleopatra? To be sure, the immortal Cleo must have had plenty of IT—for did she not even “appeal unto Caesar?" But she gave up nothing for the sake of her romance until it was all over, while her man—whichever one he happened to be at the time —was willing to throw over an empire for ner love. "All for love and the world well .o t” was written by a man. What more romantic slogan ever was coined ? Pledges Entertain Members of Tau Gamma Kappa -ororitv will be entertained with a party Friday night by. Mrs. Richard Willen and Mrs. E. M. Hoover, pledges, at- the home of Mrs. Wil.en's mother. Mrs. C. C. Hines. 1124 Evison street.

True dyes are easiest to use! Dresses, drapes or lingerie look new when they’re re-dyed with Diamond Dyes. No spotting or streaking; never a trace of that re-dyed look. Just rich, even, bright colors that hold amazingly through wear and washing. Diamond Dyes are the highest quality dyes you can buy because tkey're so rich in pure anilines. That’* what makes them so easy to use. That's why they've been famous lor 50 years. 15 cent packages—all dealers. moncMD^ycs Qualify for 50 Y§an

PURDUE GIRLS TO BE DEMONSTRATORS

‘ I I

When the state conierenee of American Home Economics Association. the Home Economics College Teachers' Association am* city supervisors of home economics in Indiana meets at Purdue, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, girls from the home economics department, of the university will demonstrate lectures at the home economics building, which is

Formal Dinner to Be Held by Sigma Deltas Celebrating the sixth anniversary of Sigma Delta Zeta sorority, a formal candlelight dinner will be held at 7 Thursday night in the Harrison room of the Columbia Club. Miss Nellie O’Connor Is chairman of the committee in chargfc of arrangements. The table decorations will be carried out in the sorority colors, blue and yellow’. Tea ros'es, the sorority flower, will be used. Miss Margaret Royse w’ill be toastmaster; Miss Marie Strieblen, historian, and Miss Lillian Rossman prophet. Stunts will be presented. Preceding dinner Miss Ruth Urmston. Miss Amelia Huber and Miss Ruth Slick will be initiated formally. Among those who have made reservations are Mrs. Gaylord O. Beard. Mrs. Murl Richardson. Mrs. C. R. Eschmever. Mrs. Jack Hodges. Miss Pauline Jacobs. Miss Mary Kalanquin, Miss Margaret Boyden. Miss Anna May Truemper. Miss Mildred Wessel. Miss Dorothy Kruse. Miss Marie Streiblen. Miss Margaret Streiblen. Miss Sophia Zinkan. Miss Royse. Miss Rossman and Miss O’Connor.

G, 0. P. CANDIDATES TO MAKE TALKS

Woman's auxiliary of Northeast Republican Club will meet Wednesday afternoon at 2:15. at Compton hall. 2001 Winter avenue. Fred Akin, candidate for assessor, and A. M. Anderson, candidate for county commissioner of the Third district. will speak. Tea will follow the program Hostesses are Mrs. Harry Meyer and Mrs. Emel Kastuig. assisted uy Mrs. Eva Clements and Mrs. Wil'liam J. Jule.

NAME MRS. SPANGLER CLUB PRESIDENT

Members of the Spencer Club elected officers at a meeting held Tuesday at the home of Mrs. B. H. Harris, 2158 North Alabama street. They are; President. Mrs Gat! J. Spangler: vice-president. Mrs. John Lucas; oorr* 1 -ponding secretary, Mrs R. R. Coble, treasurer. Mrs. Dora Vliet, and recording secretary, Miss Lizzie Coffey.

equipped with the most modem household appliances. The young women above do not believe that w'ash day is “blue Monday.” A perfectly appointed luncheon, such as they w’ill serve those attending the conference, is shown in the center picture. Below, a young house maid is getting the home management house in shape for the visitors.

PERSONALS

Mr. and Mrs. John B. Cockrum. 1416 North Alabama street, are spending a few days at the Barclay hotel, in New York City. Mrs. Charles C. Stevens and her daughter, Miss Betty Stevens, 2650 Madison avenue, are visiting Mrs. Stevens' brother. B. E. Riddle, in Detroit. „ Miss Helen Rogers Hand, who has been visiting her brother. George Rogers. 3463 Kenwood avenue, has returned to her heme in Culver. Quincy Myers Whitaker, a student at Kentucky Military institute, is spending his spring vacation with his parents. Dr. and Mrs. Joel D. Whitaker, 1707 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. W. W. Gates, 611 East Thirtysecond street, will leave Friday, April 4, for a trip through the east. Miss Janet Holliday, who is a student at Oldfield school, near Baltimore, will come this week to spend the vacation with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Alex R. Holliday, 1235 North New Jersey street. Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Coburn, 3510 North Pennsylvania street, have returned from Florida. Other Indianapolis persons who have returned from the south are Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Williams. Mrs. Morton Gould, Miss Betty Gould and Mrs. Frederick Appel and Miss Eleanor Appel. Mrs. Stanley Brooks. 3419 North Pennsylvania street, is visiting in New York City. Mrs. Elliott Smith of New York is spending a few days with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Foltz. 1847 North Delaware street. Miss Barbara Foltz is in New York at the Barbizon hotel. Mrs. Henry C. Thornton Jr.. 4430 North Pennsylvania street, will return Friday from New York. Mrs. Irving Fauvre. 1501 Maple road, is visiting in Miami, Fla. Mrs. Henry Werner. 614 North Delaware street, has gone to Chicago to meet her granddaughter. Rosemary Werner, who returning from a visit with relatives and friends in California. Tournament to Meet Mrs. W. G Holt. 622 East Twentyfifth street, will be hostess for the Tri Psi sorority bridge tournament group at 2 o’clock Friday afternoon at her home. Mrs. Charles C. Brandt will be assisting hostess. Club Meeting Stated 'lumbers o f the C. S. Club will be ert uned at the home of Miss Flora Klinestein, 2026 East Tenth street, tonight.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

‘ Cabaret ’ to Be Held at Woodstock Woodstock club will be transformed into a night club Saturdaynight for the cabaret dinner dance to be given there. The walls and ceilings will be covered and decorations will carry out the idea of a typical night club. Reginald Garstang is chairman In charge of the affair. He is being assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph W. Stempfel. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Arrick ITT. Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Stephenson. Miss Betty Burns and Paul Martin. Among those who are giving dinner parties are Mrs. Deen Francis. Mrs. D. Laurance Chambers. Mrs. D. O. Kearby. Mrs. William Ray Adams, Mrs. Robert J. Aley, Mrs. John Bookwalter. Mrs. Louis Haprle. Miss Martha Miller. G. Barrett Moxlev, William Rockwood, Reginald Garstang. Macv Malott, Paul White, Francis Brosnan and Dr. H. B. Mettel.

Miss Sherwood Prepares for April Nuptials Miss Alexandria Sherwood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood. 2847 North Meridian street, whose marriage to Geoffrey Deane Johnston. Ard-na-grena, Augher. County Tyrone. Ireland, will take place at 4 o'clock Saturday afternoon. April 26. at the Sherwood home, has chosen her attendants. Miss Louise Sherwood, her sister, and Miss Helen Harrison, will be bridesmaids. David Johnston, Cambridge, Mass., a cousin of the bridegroom, will be best man. Ushers will be the bride's brother, R. Hartley Sherwood Jr., and George Dailey. Mr. Johnston will sail for the United States April 12. Miss Aleda Sherw'ood. another sister of the bride, who is attending school in Switzerland, will come home for the wedding.

MRS, 0. W, FIFER IS RETREAT SPEAKER

Mrs. Orien W. Fifer spoke on “The Meaning of Pentecost” at the Pentecostal retreat of the Woman's Home Missionary’ Society of the Capitol Avenue Methodist Episcopal church this morning. Mrs. M. A. Farr addressed the afternoon session on “Pentecost and the Jubilee." The Rev. W. G. Moore led devotions and Mrs. W. P. Knode had charge . •: the song service. Mrs. Eugene Short and Jesse Ruth Evans sang. Other speakers on the program were Mrs. Madison Swadener, Mrs. Lase D. Weathers and Mrs. John Wesley McFalL

ANNOUNCE WEDDING OF FORTVILLE PAIR

Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Angelina Rash, daughter of William Rash, Fortville. to Francis Earl Davison, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davison, Fortville, which took place at 8:45 Tuesday night in Fortville. The service was read by the Rev. Aveny. Greenfield. Miss Anna Huston. Detroit, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Ruth Luce, Indianapolis, and Miss Dora Driffel, Fortville. Irvin Tress, Greenfield, was the best man. Ushers were Carl Schiller, Indianapolis .and Le Roy Durick. Fortville. A wedding dinner followed.

MU PHI EPSILON HOLDS MEETING

Program meeting of Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary musical sorority, was held today at the home of Mrs. June Baker, 268 Berkeley road. Miss Margaret Y. Gregoire and Gin- De Pourtales were the speakers. Tire program, made up entirely of piano numbers by Chcp n, included "Revolutionary Etude,” played by Miss Frances Wishard; “Bal'ade in G Minor” and ‘‘Etude in E Major,” by Mrs. Anita Wandell Bell; "Waltz in A Flat Major.” by Miss Rea Bauer, and "Raindrop Prelude,” by Miss Victoria Schreiber. Plan Rummage Sale Delta Tau Omega sorority will meet a: Sr'nk-Arms tonight. The sorority will hold a rummage sale at 976 Indiana avenue from 8 a. m. to 2 p. m. Saturday.

Men Often Victims of Mean Gossip BY MARTHA LEE If society could be organized so that the helping of each individual would be the aim. rather than the helping of people as a whole, one wonders just how much unhappiness, how many missteps, could be avoided. Conventions and customs do not take into consideration the differences of individuals. Personality, temperament, disposition, character have nothing to do with it. There is a certain set of rules to be followed by every man and every woman, regardless of these intangible, abstract things—temperament and personality. If a man or woman does not follow them, he is outside the law of custom and convention. It is the same principal our educational system follows. Regardless of the difference in children’s adaptability to certain subjects, they must take precisely the same course of study every’ other child takes. Men and women have been trying to standardize other men and women since ’he world began, and 1 suppose they will continue to try until Gabriel blows one long, loud blast. But it can’t be done. Not until all men and women are cut from the same pattern, off the same bolt of material. It is considered unethical and practically criminal for a married man to find the least bit of attraction in any woman save his wife. He should not like to talk with her. He should not. be amused by her wit and mannerisms. And if he is. he’s condemned as a man who has no respect for the holy sacrament of marriage. Becomes Gossip If a married man is seen walking down the street in animated conversation with a woman other than his wife, it immediately becomes gossip that he is playing around. The next time he sees that woman, there is apt to be a guilty restraint in his conversation. His friends have chided him about his interest in her. Now It may be. he merely has been amused by her conversation. If innuendoes and insinuations had not been made, he may never have thought, of her again. But convention and custom does not allow him to disillusion himself normally. His interest in the woman is exaggerated. His attitude to her changes as soon as he realizes others are thinking about the friendship. It takes on a clandestine atmosphere without his ever doing anything to make a clandestine affair of it. If married men. who, because they are human beings, must be normally attracted toward the personality of women other than their wives, were allowed to talk to them under normal conditions, there would not be so many "affairs,” it seems to me. The attitude of the people as a whole toward friendships between married men and “other” women forces a situation which otherwise would occur in rare cases only. Rides in Country It’s these rides in the country, these mezzanie floor and matinee movie meetings and the out-of-the-way tearoom rendezvous that cast, a sub rosa atmosphere over a normal friendship between a man and woman, which might otherwise be dissipated normally by the same route that, other friendships become less keen. What I’m trying to bring out is this. The air of mystery and secrecy always has been one of the big box office attractions to human nature. Add to that the "forbidden” quality of such a friendship and you have all the elements that, it takes to stir up the romantic soul of a man. If things were arranged in such a way that the man could disillusion himself by being allowed to talk to the woman who seems attractive and interesting, under normal (and unromantic) circumstances, there would be less straying from home. Many a man who has had merely a normal ’nterest in some woman has been thrown into an "affair” with her by the gossip of his friends and acquaintances. Spare the scenes and spoil the romance!

CARD PARTIES

Harold C. Megrew auxiliary No. 3, United Spanish War Veterans, will give a benefit card party at the Grand Army League hall tonight. Mrs. Marie Cron is chairman in charge, assisted by Mrs. Eliza Moon and Mrs. Jennie Marshall. Bethel Spiritual church will give a bunco and euchre party at ,2 Thursday afternoon and 8 Thursday night at the hall. 1331 Spruce street. Bunco, euchre and lotto will be played at 2:15 Thursday afternoon at South Side Turner hall, 306 Prospect street. Mrs. Theodore Bemd is in charge. Bunco and lotto will be played at St. Cecelia’s club rooms at 2:30 on Thursday afternoon under auspices of the Social Club of Sacred Heart parish. Mrs. Graham Entertav s Mrs. Robert S. Graham entertained Tuesday night with a small bridge party at her home, 3750 Fall Creek boulevard. Her guests included Mrs. Merle Martin, Mrs. Oscar Hagemeier, Mrs. Russell Roberts. Mrs. Robert Christopher. Mrs. Ray Goodwin. Mrs. Fred Beck. Mrs. Leonard Thiel and Miss Hazel Van Auken. Sorority Members Meet Plii Tau sorority members will meet at the home of Miss Thelma Kinnaman, 1408 Gladstone avenue, tonight.

Gx G 'INTEI2PEET3 wj*" * Lest — Tollman’? beautifully shirred pale green chiffon frock. Right — Lancin' s silver lame evening hat.

j I a lovely thing it is, really! It’s a / j hat, you know, not just a drape, Girt'] and ever since seeing it at the *ll/1 I j formal opening of her spring colly' !/ JjjrfrjWfcfcvi lection, every one has been looking for one ON somebody. Os course, it requires a very formal occasion, and there aren’t so many M EMM; ft of those this season. Still it's Imaa I ' l° ve U" and I thought you'd like to Am devoir! >,illlff ART DEPARTMENT to :■ HOLD BANQUET Juydfiuljjlydl Seventh annual banquet, of the pmlmfwfjm art department of the Woman’s De//Wnrlv'ff) partment Club will be held at 6:30 1/ TV llJ ' ll | i\ Saturday night. April 5, in the / ill / ly/ \\ Riley room of the Claypool hotel. / j!' ] / I \ \ The banquet will be given in /111 ! \ \ honor of the visiting delegation to / II j M the convention of the Indiana Fed"/Xjy . eration of Art Clubs. fj jf —/ \ O lan B. Stoughton Holbourn. the V / / \ [V J principal speaker, will talk on “Art I \ \ an d the Aim of Life.” Reservations /Ar \ W may be made with Mrs. William C. L j 1/T Gardner, 2302 North Alabama street, joJ Nil * until Monday, March 31.

PARIS. March 26

are two stories in prints; and in ease you have any doubts whatsoever about whether the new prints really look new. I can tell you right now that they DO. This summer’s prints are as different from the designs of two or three years ago as chalk is from cheese. In the chiffons, for instance, for very summers’ afternoon wear and evening gowns, you have the prints in soft pastel shades, sometimes rather large, sometimes rather small in design, and usually flowers. Both the background and the finished flower are soft. And then there are the very tiny prints for daytime wear, which look exactly like mosaic, being little flecks or scrolls or dots or whatnotes of various colors. And then, of course, there are the very popular polka-dot effects, tiny polka-dots as a rule, and on a dark ground. White polka-dots on navy blue are particularly smart. * * * HOW do you choose a print to wear, in the matter of color and in relation to your own coloring? Well, not by ONE of the colors in the print, but by the general EFFECT of the whole thing. Because prints, as you can tell so readily from the fine white on black, or fine black on white effects, which give an excellent tone of gray, always run to tones, regardless of the background. It is this TONE you select. And they are very good, indeed, these prints, which not only have a tone that is becoming to you, but as a rule, an extra color or so in the design that is EXTRA becoming. att a SHIRRED, but with the shirring in the form of incrustations and each incrustation put on to make the dress conform to the lines of.the body—that Is what gave so much charm to Tollman’s pale green chiffon evening dress that I sketched for you today. But then, I can say truthfully, without batting an eyelash, that Tollman styles are ALWAYS charming! nan There are some cate tricks that yon can do with glove 5 and bags. Oh. one is a musketeer cuff, which you make of felt and then use the rest of the felt to make a terribly smart bag. Another is a gathered sort of affair on the glove, which fastens with silk cords ending in colored glass balls—well, you’d just better send a 2-eent stamp and get that Interesting leaflet, which tells you how to put expensive cuffs on inexpensive gloves! ’X if you’re not interested in that, there is a terribly smart, new bag in the same leaflet. The stamp goes to the Dare Department of The Times, you know. a a a Fashion French Lisere (lee-ze-ray)—piping. Lisiere (lee-zee-air) —Selvedge. Lisse < leese > —Smooth. Long’(ue) (long) -long. Longueur (long-gur)—length. ana LANVIN'S really beautiful evening hat of pale silver lame is sketched for you today—what

Can’t Be Done “ONLY ONE HOUR FOR LUNCH” See Tomorrow

a lovely thing it is, really! It’s a hat. you know, not just a drape, and ever since seeing it at the formal opening of her spring collection. every one has been looking for one ON somebody. Os course, it requires a very formal occasion, and there aren’t so many of those this season. Still It's lovely and I thought you'd like to see it. mam Au Revoir!

Seventh annual banquet of the art department of the Woman’s Department Club will be held at 6:30 Saturday night, April 5, in the Riley room of the Claypool hotel. The banquet will be given in honor of the visiting delegation to the convention of the Indiana Federation of Art Clubs. lan B. Stoughton Holbourn. the principal speaker, will talk on “Art and the Aim of Life.” Reservations may be made W'ith Mrs. William C. Gardner, 2302 North Alabama street, until Monday, March 31.

MRS, BROWN TO GIVE TRAVEL LECTURE

Woman’s auxiliary of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church will present Mrs. Demarchus Brown in a lecture Friday night at the church. Mrs. Brown’s subject will be, “Up the Nile to the Tombs of the Kings.” Mrs. R. B. Wilson, president of the auxiliary, is in charge of the affair. Tickets may be obtained from Mrs. O. W. Dicks, 1609 North Meridian street, or at the church Friday night. Kilgore to Speak Brookside Park Woman's Club will meet Friday night at the community house. Children from the foreigrf settlement will give a program of dances in costumes of their native lands. David Kilgore, director of recreation for the city, will speak.

ART-NOR BEAUTY SHOPPE PERMANENT WAVING ulm Our Permanents bring out your (t*o Pftto(h ■ft beauty pZ3U OiU Five Months Resets Given If We Shampoo. w 345 Mass. Ave. Lincoln 5650

SPRING DAYS are new-life days Now that the body is bounding into new life after the shut-in-days of winter—don’t load it diwn with heavy, indigestible foods. Shredded Wheat is the energy-food that supplies the vital food elements of the whole wheat grain in a digestible form vitamins, mineral salts and proteins. Eat it with milk for breakfast and see how it carries you through the forenoon without fatigue.

SHREDDED gBSIWHEAT W,TH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT

MARCH 26, 1980

Butler Prom Booth Prize to Be Given Fraternities and sororities at Butler university will initiate the practice of decorating individual booth* at the junior prom, to be held Monday night, April 11. at the Indian* ballroom. The booths will be f<* the convenience of the members of the respective organizations, and to the organizations possessing thM most attractive booth, the committee will present a loving cup. Governor and Mrs. Harry G. Leslie and Mayor Reginald Sullivan will be honor guests at the prom Butler co-eds are in the midst of the campaign for prom queen election. Each ticket has a stub attached. with the privilege of voting for the purchaser’s choice. Election will end April 4. and the lucky co-ed will be crowned queen the night, of the prom by the president of the class. Jean Goldkette’s Vagabonds have been selected to furnish the music for this most important event on the social calendar. Members of the committer directing this year’s prom are Miss Betty Jean Davis, Miss Marthalou Shoener. Miss Margaret Schumacher, Ralph McElroy. Wendell Shullenberger and Maybum Landgraf.

Artists ’ Club Costume Ball Judges Named Mrs. Robert w. Davidson, teacher of costume designing at the John Herron Art institute; George Phillip Meier, designer of gowns, and Oakley Richey, instructor of stage craft at the art institute, formerly with Stuart Walker company, have been selected by members of the Artists' Club to be judges at the annual costume ball to be held Saturday night at the Severin roof garden. The grand march, during which all guests will pass before the judges, will begin at 10 o'clock. Members of the club will appear In Chinese costume, although guests are not restricted to this type of dress. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Arthur I. Woodward. 413 Harvard place.

G, 0. P. CLUB TO HOLD RUMMAGE SALE

Ways and means committee of the Indiana Women’s Republican Club will have a rummage sale Saturday at 2131 Martindale avenue. The doors will open at 8 o'clock. The committee ha<j asked members of the club and their friends especially need clothing for babies, children, and men. Those interested in contributing may call Mrs. F. C. Atkinson, He. 4734, or Mrs. Lawrence Orr, Hu. 6523, and they will call for bundles.